FOOD BIOFORTIFICATION, PROVIDING HEALTH TO BRAZILIAN MEALS
Description
According to FAO (2013), approximately two billion people suffer with micronutrient deficiency of some kind. The introduction of biofortified crops – varieties improved through selective breeding in order to achieve higher micronutrient contents – may complement existing interventions and allow, on a sustainable way, to reach populations with low access to formal health systems and markets.
To reach 20 million rural families until 2020 and one billion consumers until 2030, worldwide, through the development of inclusive and sustainable markets for biofortified crops.
The practice starts with research, when the best specimens are selected and crossed successively until a new variety with higher micronutrient content and favorable agronomic characteristics is obtained. After obtaining the improved cultivars, both recipes and processed products are developed. All materials produced by the project (cultivars and processed goods) are tested for quality control of nutritional components. Then, acceptance studies are carried with producers and consumers. Finally, technology transfer actions are carried in order to reach farmers, focusing on family farmers. All stages are monitored an obtained results are kept within a database for later analysis, allowing for constant improvement.
After this initial stage, technology transfer became the focus. Until 2018, around 40000 families (approximately 200 thousand people) were reached. In addition, several demonstrative and multiplication units for the cultivars were implemented on different cities and the Project became part of public policies.
Research also generates several papers published in international journals. Plus, the project has published 3 recipe books.
Main challenges were working throughout a country as large as Brazil, where different territories have distinct climates, soils and cultures, demanding not only specific cultivars for each area, but also a skilled coordination of logistics and management of human capital. Guaranteeing the funds needed for a project this big is also a constant challenge.
Biofortification contributes to the fight against hidden hunger (malnutrition caused not by the lack of food itself, but lack of proper micronutrient ingestion), which may cause several health issues, specially between lower social classes and developing countries; while promoting a sustainable insertion of small producers within local markets and the sustainable use of water and clean sources of energy.
harvestplus.org
ciat.cgiar.org
embrapa.br
lac.harvestplus.org
SDGS & Targets
Deliverables & Timeline
Resources mobilized
Partnership Progress
Name | Description |
---|---|
17.14 | Enhance policy coherence for sustainable development |
Feedback
Action Network


Timeline
Entity
Region
- Latin America and the Caribbean
Geographical coverage
Website/More information
Countries

Contact Information
José Luíz de Carvalho, Project Manager